The World’s Wit and Humor: An Encyclopedia in 15 Volumes. 1906.
Thomas Percy (17291811)The Distracted Puritan
A
When zeal and godly knowledge
Have put me in hope
To deal with the Pope,
As well as the best in the college?
Boldly I preach, hate a cross, hate a surplice,
Mitres, copes, and rochets;
Come, hear me pray nine times a day,
And fill your heads with crotchets.
I had my education,
Where my friends surmise
I dazel’d my eyes
With the sight of revelation.
They lash’d my four poor quarters;
Whilst this I endure,
Faith makes me sure
To be one of Foxe’s martyrs.
Through antichrist’s perswasion:
Take off this chain,
Neither Rome nor Spain
Can resist my strong invasion.
I have knock’d off three already;
If they let me alone
I’ll leave him none:
But they say I am too heady.
I met the great red dragon;
I kept him aloof
With the armour of proof,
Though here I have never a rag on.
There fought I with this monster:
But the sons of pride
My zeal deride,
And all my deeds misconster.
With a flying book between them.
I have been in despair
Five times in a year,
And been cur’d by reading Greenham.
The black line of damnation;
Those crooked veins
So stuck in my brains,
That I fear’d my reprobation.
I plac’d my chiefest pleasure;
Till I prick’d my foot
With an Hebrew root,
That I bled beyond all measure.
And all the high commission;
I gave him no grace,
But told him to his face,
That he favour’d superstition.
Boldly I preach, hate a cross, hate a surplice,
Mitres, copes, and rochets;
Come hear me pray nine times a day,
And fill your heads with crotchets.